Issue 6 2017: Central Asia. The forgotten region?

Central Asia is an ethnically, geographically and culturally diverse region, covering a similar land mass as the European Union. Yet, it remains one of the least familiar to the general public in the West. An important region in its own right, located in a volatile geopolitical area between Russia, China, Afghanistan and Iran, the five states of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan rarely make headlines in the mainstream media. Owing to this neglect the region has fallen victim to orientalist clichés, presenting it as a spacious blank steppe dividing the big players or as a collection of post-Soviet artificial entities devoid of agency in international relations.

In this issue we seek to confront that trend by showing Central Asian as players in the international arena with complex societies facing different internal and external dilemmas. While it is true that authoritarian tendencies, poor economic performance and Islam have been common features uniting the five states, the reality on the ground is much more complex. The issue takes on the well-worn new Great Game narrative to show that the exhausted metaphor has been little more than a misused stereotype. We also look at the unique nation building experiences of Central Asian countries following the collapse of the Soviet Union and how the respective societies have built their understanding of democracy.

Table of Contents:

OPINION & ANALYSIS

The new Great Game that is not – Filippo Costa BuranelliThe self-made Apaches of Kyrgyzstan – A photo-report by Magdalena BorowiecHow Central Asia understands democracy – Mariya Y. OmelichevaCentral Asia and water. No time left for squabbles – Peter LeonardThe complex reality of radicalisation in Central Asia – An interview with Bhavna DavéThe crawling threat of the Crimea scenario – Naubet BisenovA looming humanitarian crisis in the land Orwell forgot – Christopher SchwartzIn search of the enemies of the state – Anna CieślewskaPutin and his monsters – Artem FilatovThe Kremlin sets its eyes on YouTube – Svitlana OvcharovaCentral Europe is more vulnerable than it appears – Péter Krekó, Edit Zgut and Lóránt GyőriThe rebranding of Jobbik – Dominik HéjjIs it too early to speak about justice in Donbas? – Gerhard Kemp and Igor LyubashenkoVisas for Georgians are not enough – Mateusz KubiakThe curse and miracle of Kupiškis – Emil Staulund Larsen and Noah Groves

INTERVIEWS

Russia is unprepared for the next world order – An interview with Bobo Lo

The disintegration train has left Brussels – Iwona ReichardtPutin’s long awaited opportunity, retaliation and revenge – Ostap KushnirCultural diplomacy at its best – Dorota Sieroń-GalusekLegnica with a view to Russia – Grzegorz Żurawiński

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Issue 6 2017: Central Asia. The forgotten region?

Central Asia is an ethnically, geographically and culturally diverse region, covering a similar land mass as the European Union. Yet, it remains one of the least familiar to the general public in the West.

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